tomlt
Established Member
I've got the Mafell P1CC, an older bosch GST135 and the Makita 4350 and a Makita 18v Brushless Body grip. Do I need 4 jigsaws - nope. Do I like buying ever increasingly expensive tools - Yes :-(
The Mafell is good, but not really any better than the Bosch or the festool I've tried. The Makitas for their price are excellent and the 4350 has had some hard work cutting 10mm mild steel and keeps on going. I mostly use the 18v Brushless Makita, I like the body grip, the light and the portability. It lasts for ages on a 4ah battery and has enough grunt to tackle most jobs (kitchen work tops etc.). None of them are much good in anything thicker than 2". I recently cut out a hole in the centre of an ash table slab for a "beer bucket" - used the mafell. It was too hot to touch after 15mins of work, the quality bosch blade still cut off vertical. Admittedly the slab was 3.5" thick and pretty hard even though only air dried for 12months.
Unfortunately I don't think the jigsaw will ever be a precision tool for me, better suited for the building site than the workshop in my experiences. Definitely useful in the right circumstances though.
The Mafell is good, but not really any better than the Bosch or the festool I've tried. The Makitas for their price are excellent and the 4350 has had some hard work cutting 10mm mild steel and keeps on going. I mostly use the 18v Brushless Makita, I like the body grip, the light and the portability. It lasts for ages on a 4ah battery and has enough grunt to tackle most jobs (kitchen work tops etc.). None of them are much good in anything thicker than 2". I recently cut out a hole in the centre of an ash table slab for a "beer bucket" - used the mafell. It was too hot to touch after 15mins of work, the quality bosch blade still cut off vertical. Admittedly the slab was 3.5" thick and pretty hard even though only air dried for 12months.
Unfortunately I don't think the jigsaw will ever be a precision tool for me, better suited for the building site than the workshop in my experiences. Definitely useful in the right circumstances though.